Imagine a generic electrical power plant. The process pretty much goes like this:
1) create heat
2) heat boils water into steam
3) steam runs a turbine generator
There is heat energy loss along each step. One reason why is because as the pipes and machinery heats up it also causes the air around it to heat up. I assume every power plant must have an air ventilation system to pump out the hot air and replace it with ambient temperature air. This is a waste of energy. The whole point of producing heat was not to warm up the air but instead to boil the water to make the turbines spin.
Now imagine if a vacuum was created inside the power plant! There would be no energy loss through heat transfer from the machinery/pipes to the air/atmosphere. Therefore a greater percentage of the heat from the boiler must reach the turbines simply because there is no other place for the heat to go.
Actually there is another path. Since the machinery is ultimately bolted down to the ground some of the heat will be wasted by being transfered to the ground. If you really want to get exotic the entire machinery can be placed on some sort of magnetic levitation system. In such a system ALL the heat generated by the boiler (minus whatever was used to initially warm up the pipes/machinery) must eventually find it's way to the turbines simply because there is no other place for the heat to go.
Actually that's not true. The machinery will invariably produce infra red radiation as a secondary effect of heat. Since radiation can travel thru a vacuum some of the energy will invariably bleed off into the outside environment. Like I said no system can be 100%
Is this idea totally "half-baked" or is there some potential here?









